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Contract details

• Base salary: $2 million a year for five years with 3-year rollover triggered by WSU

• Supplemental income: $250,000 per year

• Incentives: Numerous, but undisclosed

• Buyout: $2 million, goes down $400,000 each year

• Termination: $2.25 million a year, goes down $450,000 each year

• Assistants: $1.8 million salary pool for assistants

Coaching career

1987: Cal Poly assistant

1988: College of the Desert assistant/linebackers

1989: Pori, Finland (European League), head coach

1989-91: Iowa Wesleyan, offensive coordinator

1992-1996: Valdosta State, offensive coordinator

1997-1998: Kentucky, offensive coordinator

1999: Oklahoma, offensive coordinator

2000-2009: Texas Tech, head coach

Overall record at Texas Tech: 84-43.

Bowl record at Texas Tech: 5-4

Notable at TTU

• 10 consecutive winning seasons

• Nine consecutive bowl appearances

• 19-11 record against in-state rivals (Baylor, Texas, Texas A&M)

• 53-11 home record

• Big 12 coach of the year (2008)

PULLMAN – Nov. 16 was one of the most important dates in Washington State’s more than 100-year football history, and only two men knew it.

That was the day WSU athletic director Bill Moos flew from the 37 degrees in Pullman to Key West, Fla., where he met with former Texas Tech football coach Mike Leach.

Over the next few hours on a beautiful low-80s day, Moos and Leach developed the foundation that led to Wednesday’s announcement that the 50-year-old Leach would take the reins of WSU’s football program. Leach will be formally introduced at a press conference on Tuesday.

“I prefaced my visit with (Leach) with, ‘I’m hoping my football coach finishes strong and, in that event we’re going to go forward the way we are,’ but I’ve got to be prepared in the event we don’t have the success I feel we need to have,” Moos said Wednesday, referring to Paul Wulff, that day preparing the Cougars for their game with Utah.

But that strong finish didn’t materialize – WSU lost to Utah in overtime and Washington the next week – and Moos fired Wulff on Tuesday.

By then he got a basic agreement in place with Leach.

“The job wasn’t open officially until (Tuesday), but we had a lot of it laid out prior to that,” said Moos, explaining that Leach’s agent and a representative of his had been hammering out details since the Utah defeat. “I did not officially offer him the job until after the Apple Cup.”

That agreement, which Leach agreed to in principle, calls for a compensation package of $2.25 million and incentives per year for five years, with a three-year rollover triggered each year by Moos. If Leach wants to leave for another job, the buyout starts at $2 million but falls $400,000 each year.

There is another $1.8 million earmarked for his assistants.

“I put those figures out there to him and there was never any bargaining,” Moos said. “He said, ‘Hey, that’s great.’ ”

It is the richest contract in Washington State’s athletic history.

“This school has never hired a BCS coach,” Moos said of the cost. “This just isn’t a BCS coach. This is a coach that in 10 years went to 10 bowl games.

“We’ve got a coach that, I believe, his peers in this conference are going to take notice. and we are on our way, in my opinion, to a great future with Cougar football.”

According to numbers in USA Today earlier this month, at least three Pac-12 coaches make $2.25 million or more, though those figures don’t include USC, a private institution. Arizona recently signed former West Virginia and Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez to a five-year, $9.55 million contract. There are also openings at Arizona State and UCLA which may end up paying more than WSU.

Wulff was paid $600,000 plus incentives. His assistants made $1.3 million combined this season.

“With this deal he will be in the top five or six,” in the conference, Moos said.

Asked how he was able to entice Leach, whose Texas Tech teams won 84 games in 10 years and went to a bowl game at the end of each (WSU hasn’t been in a bowl since 2003), Moos harkened back to that day in Key West.

“In our conversation, he had great interest, and it was genuine, I could tell,” Moos said. “We really connected. Here’s a guy from Cody, Wyo., and a farm kid from Edwall, and we’re talking about snowdrifts.

“A lot of schools wanted him, but he wanted Washington State.”

In Leach, Washington State has attracted one of the hottest commodities in the nation – on the field. But the way his tenure at Texas Tech ended made him somewhat of a pariah.

In late December 2009, Tech suspended Leach after Adam James, son of ESPN commentator Craig James, alleged he had been isolated in an equipment room when he couldn’t practice because of a concussion.

The incident, added atop Leach’s acrimonious contract negotiations with the school, eventually led to his dismissal. Within weeks Leach, a 1986 graduate of Pepperdine Law School, had sued the school for wrongful termination.

Before the year was out he sued ESPN and a public relations firm for libel and slander. Both suits are still in litigation.

On the field, Leach developed his reputation as an offensive innovator at Valdosta State and Kentucky, before moving on to Oklahoma as offensive coordinator under Bob Stoops. Former Arizona head coach Mike Stoops was the defensive coordinator when Leach was at Oklahoma.

Named Texas Tech head coach in 2000, his Red Raiders teams won seven games the first two seasons, then never less than eight until he was let go in 2009. They played in bowl games each of those 10 years, though Leach did not coach in the 2009 Alamo Bowl.

When he was let go, Leach was making a reported $2.5 million per year.

Leach’s Tech teams led the nation in passing six times and only in his first year finished out of the top five.

“I’m not going to hire somebody whose going to run the Houston veer,” Moos said Tuesday. “I do believe you do fill the seats by having a flashy, high-octane offense that lights up the scoreboard.

“And then you come back and win the championships with defense.”

The Red Raiders finished in the top 10 in scoring seven times while Leach was head coach.

Leach was born in Susanville, Calif., in 1961, although he grew up in Cody, Wyo. He attended Brigham Young when LaVell Edwards was the coach, although he didn’t play football.

His first assistant coaching job was at Cal Poly before spending a year at the College of the Desert, a junior college in Palm Desert, Calif., with much of the rest of his career spent in the South and Southwest.

It has been a whirlwind week for the Cougars, who completed a 4-8 season Saturday with a 38-21 Apple Cup defeat to Washington. Within the next 48 hours, Moos says he pondered Wulff’s future before ending his four-year tenure at WSU on Tuesday morning.

Instead he was sealing the deal with Leach.

“I always have to have another plan,” Moos said of meeting with Leach while Wulff was still the coach. “I felt if we had a chance to get Mike Leach, I had to set the foundation before that before the season was over. To tell you the truth, he was the only guy I talked to and the only guy I wanted.”

Wulff, who played at Washington State in the late 1980s, was 9-40 in his four years at his alma mater.

Two of his assistants, offensive line coach Steve Morton and linebackers coach Chris Tormey, along with Shawn Deeds, director of football operations, will stay in their positions for the time being to coordinate recruiting and overseeing the program.

All of the assistants’ contracts expire March 31, 2012.

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